Suess, Eduard
Suess, Eduard
(ā`do͞oärt züs), 1831–1914, Austrian geologist, b. London. He was a professor (1857–1901) at the Univ. of Vienna and served for more than 20 years in the Austrian parliament. He was an authority on structural geology, especially of mountains, and postulated the existence of the giant land mass Gondwanaland (see continental driftcontinental drift,geological theory that the relative positions of the continents on the earth's surface have changed considerably through geologic time. Though first proposed by American geologist Frank Bursley Taylor in a lecture in 1908, the first detailed theory of
..... Click the link for more information. ). His great work was Das Antlitz der Erde (5 vol., 1883–1901; tr. The Face of the Earth, 1904–24).
Suess, Eduard
Born Aug. 20, 1831, in London; died Apr. 26, 1914, in Vienna. Austrian geologist.
Suess graduated from the Vienna Polytechnic School in 1852. From 1857 to 1901 he was professor of geology at the University of Vienna; from 1898 to 1911 he was president of the Vienna Academy of Sciences. In 1873 he became a member of the Reichsrat. Suess studied the geological structure and tectonics of the Alps, of the Lombard depression, and of the Apennines. In 1875 he published The Origin of the Alps, in which he developed his ideas about mountain building on the basis of the contraction hypothesis, which explained tectonic processes and folding as the result of the cooling and contraction of the earth. In his principal scientific work, The Face of the Earth (vols. 1–3, 1883–1909), Suess summarized all the regional research conducted in various countries to the early 20th century and described the ideas about the structure and development of the earth’s crust in continental areas based on the contraction hypothesis. This work had considerable influence on the development of various branches of theoretical geology. Suess received the P. P. Semenov Gold Medal from the Russian Geographical Society and the C. Lyell Gold Medal from the London Royal Academy for the third volume of The Face of the Earth.
Many concepts introduced by Suess, such as those of the sima and sial shells of the earth, eustatic fluctuations of the sea level, Variscan folding, the Tethys, and the Karpinskii lines have been preserved in geology. His conclusions about regional geology, however, particularly his idea about the ancient nucleus of Asia and the relations between folding, are obsolete.